Originally posted by IamFODI
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I don't buy into the concept because there is rarely a situation where you're driving in a straight line at a specific speed and hit a certain type of bump at a perpendicular angle. Bumps are random and a properly set up damper will quell oscillations quickly anyway. Also why corner balancing a street driven car is probably a waste of time for 99.9% of people.
You're exactly right, maybe there are advantages in some cases, but you can't just put stiff rear and soft front springs and expect your car to feel comfortable and handle well. It's the whole combination of ride heights, bump stops, spring rates, damper tuning, roll bars, and tires. I don't have the magic formula and there are probably multiple right answers that can work great.
There is also the personal preference aspect. I don't mind feeling bumps in the road, it lets me know what's going on and gives me a degree of confidence. What I don't like is when I feel bumps or vibrations out of sync with what I am expecting to feel. Some people prefer a magic carpet ride and want to float along with zero inputs to the driver until the suspension bottoms out. People also tolerate body roll differently, I think I like a more flat chassis from a confidence perspective even though some body roll might be faster.
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